Hangar AE
History
Built in 1959, Hangar AE was originally built for aDepartment of Defense missile program. The facility was
acquired in 1960 by NASA and modified for unmanned
missions.
The building contains a Class 10K horizontal laminar flow clean
room complex, a telemetry ground station, an extensive
communications center for data, voice and video, 3 launch
vehicle data centers, the Mission Director’s Center
, and offices for payload and contractor personnel. It is located at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, but it is maintained by NASA Kennedy Space Center.
NASA's Launch Services Program utilizes this facility
as its launch communications center. The entire building is
environmentally controlled.
The Hangar AE control rooms provide real-time voice, data
and video information for expendable vehicle checkout and
launch operations, similar to that provided by the Space
Shuttle control rooms. Each console in the LVDC has a
40-channel voice instrument called a MOCS2. Other areas
have 24-channel versions of the MOCS2. Each console has
access to an administrative telephone and a modem line
for use with a laptop computer, if required.
The building can obtain data from launch sites beyond those at Kennedy Space Center and Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. Launch sites for missions Hangar AE have gathered telemetry on include:
- Vandenberg Air Force Base
- Reagan Test Site
- Wallops Flight Facility
- Kodiak Launch Complex
During the TDRS-L launch in January 2014, LSP engineers located in Hangar AE troubleshot a problem with periodic dropouts in telemetry from the vehicle threatened to stop the launch and allowed the launch to continue that night.
Spacecraft processed
- Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Mission